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Paula Moya
2015-2016 Faculty Research Fellow, Professor, Department of English
03/10/2016 - 4:00pm
CCSRE Conference Room, Building 360
Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity (CCSRE), Co-sponsored by the Program in Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (FGSS) and the American Studies Program

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Paula Moya is Professor of English and, by courtesy, of Iberian and Latin American Cultures. She is the author of The Social Imperative: Race, Close Reading, and Contemporary Literary Criticism (Stanford UP, 2015) and Learning From Experience: Minority Identities, Multicultural Struggles (UC Press, 2002). She has also co-edited three collections of original essays, Doing Race: 21 Essays for the 21st Century (W.W. Norton, Inc., 2010), Identity Politics Reconsidered (Palgrave, 2006), and Reclaiming Identity: Realist Theory and the Predicament of Postmodernism (UC Press, 2000).
 
Professor Moya has served as the Director of the Program in Modern Thought and Literature, Vice Chair of the Department of English, and Director of the Undergraduate Program at the Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity. She is a recipient of the Dean's Award for Distinguished Teaching, a Ford Foundation postdoctoral fellowship, the Outstanding Chicana/o Faculty Member award, a Brown Faculty fellowship, and a Clayman Institute fellowship.

 

About her book:

In the context of the ongoing crisis in literary criticism, The Social Imperative reminds us that while literature will never by itself change the world, it remains a powerful tool and important actor in the ongoing struggle to imagine better ways to be human and free. Figuring the relationship between reader and text as a type of friendship, the book elaborates the social-psychological concept of schema to show that our multiple social contexts affect what we perceive and how we feel when we read. Championing and modeling a kind of close reading that attends to how literature reflects, promotes, and contests pervasive sociocultural ideas about race, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality, Paula M. L. Moya demonstrates the power of works of literature by writers such as Junot Diaz, Toni Morrison, and Helena Maria Viramontes to alter perceptions and reshape cultural imaginaries. Insofar as literary fiction is a unique form of engagement with weighty social problems, it matters not only which specific works of literature we read and teach, but also how we read them, and with whom. This is what constitutes the social imperative of literature.